Ontario English Catholic Teachers’ Assn. v. Ontario (Attorney
General), [2001] 1 S.C.R. 470, 2001 SCC 15
The Ontario English Catholic Teachers’
Association, Marshall Jarvis, Claire Ross
and Annemarie Ross Appellants
v.
The Attorney General for Ontario Respondent
and between
The Ontario Public School Boards’
Association, the Toronto District School
Board, the Ontario Secondary School
Teachers’ Federation, the Elementary
Teachers’ Federation of Ontario, Joleene Kemp,
David Edwards and Robert
Churchill Appellants
v.
The Attorney General for
Ontario Respondent
and
The Attorney General of Quebec,
the Attorney General of Manitoba,
the Attorney General of British Columbia,
the Attorney General for Alberta,
the Ontario Catholic School Trustees’ Association,
the Association franco-ontarienne des conseils
scolaires catholiques, the Association des conseillers(ères)
des écoles publiques de l’Ontario, the Alberta Catholic
School Trustees’ Association, the Board of Lethbridge
Roman Catholic Separate School District No. 9,
Dwayne Berlando, the Boards of Education of
the Regina School Division No. 4, Saskatchewan
Rivers School Division No. 119, Swift Current
School Division No. 94, Weyburn School Division No. 97,
Yorkton School Division No. 93, Moose Jaw School
Division No. 1, Saskatoon School Division No. 13,
Estevan School Division No. 95, the Public School
Boards’ Association of Alberta, the Board of
Trustees of the Edmonton School District No. 7 and
Cathryn Staring Parrish Interveners
Indexed as: Ontario English Catholic Teachers’ Assn. v.
Ontario (Attorney General)
Neutral citation: 2001 SCC 15.
File No.: 27363.
2000: November 8; 2001: March 8.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and L’Heureux‑Dubé,
Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour and LeBel JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for ontario
Constitutional law ‑‑ Education ‑‑
Funding -- School boards -- Right to financial management and control -- Right
to tax – Provincial legislation creating new governance and funding model for
all school boards in Ontario ‑‑ Legislation authorizing Minister of
Finance to make regulations prescribing tax rates for school purposes --
Legislation also providing for supervision of school boards’ financial affairs
by Minister of Education and Training and for take over of a board’s financial
control under certain conditions -- Whether legislation prejudicially affecting
any protected denominational rights guaranteed by s. 93 of Constitution
Act, 1867 – Education Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.2, Divisions B, D and F –
Education Quality Improvement Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, c. 31.
Constitutional law ‑‑ Conventions --
Education ‑‑ Funding -- Public school boards ‑‑
Property taxes -- Provincial legislation creating new governance and funding
model for all school boards in Ontario -- Whether constitutional convention
protects design of public school system -- Whether constitutional convention
protects right to levy or determine property taxes – Education Act, R.S.O.
1990, c. E.2, Divisions B, D and F -- Education Quality Improvement Act,
1997, S.O. 1997, c. 31.
Constitutional law – Delegation -- Taxation –
Education – Provincial legislation authorizing Minister of Finance to make
regulations prescribing tax rates for school purposes – Whether guarantee of
no taxation without representation infringed -- Whether delegation
constitutional – Constitution Act, 1867, s. 53 – Education Act, R.S.O.
1990, c. E.2, s. 257.12(1)(b) – Education Quality Improvement Act,
1997, S.O. 1997, c. 31.
The 1997 Education Quality Improvement Act (“EQIA”)
amended the Ontario Education Act and created a new governance and
funding model for all school boards in the province, in part to address a
disparity of revenues between boards by allocating funds on a per-pupil basis.
The EQIA removed the ability of school boards to set property tax rates
for education and centralized taxation power in the hands of the Minister of
Finance. The new model limits the power of boards to control their budgets and
expenditures but guarantees local control over denominational expenditures.
The denominational tax base has not been altered because residential taxpayers
continue to designate their education taxes for either the public or the
separate school system. School boards derive revenue from property taxes
collected by municipalities, provincial grants, development charges, and some
other limited sources, but the power to make regulations prescribing tax rates
for school purposes is vested in the Minister of Finance. The Lieutenant
Governor in Council has a restricted power to make regulations governing grants.
Grants may consist of foundation grants allocated to all boards at a per-pupil
rate to cover the basic cost of an educational program, special purpose grants
allocated for particular needs, and pupil accommodation grants for
infrastructure. Grants are designated as classroom or non-classroom spending
with some restrictions on how the types of grants may be used. Total annual
funding of a board is subject to a ceiling. The Ministry of Education and
Training may investigate the financial affairs of a board if the board has a
fiscal year deficit, or fails to make certain payments, or if the Minister has
concerns about the board’s ability to meet financial obligations. An
investigator may recommend to the Minister that the Ministry take administrative
control of a board. The Minister cannot interfere with the denominational
aspects of a separate school board nor with the linguistic or cultural aspects
of a French-language board. The Lieutenant Governor in Council may revoke the
Ministry’s control over a board.
In Ontario, denominational education rights provided
by law in 1867 are protected by s. 93(1) of the Constitution Act, 1867 .
Both groups of appellants argue that the new funding and governance model
violates s. 93(1) because it interferes with claimed rights to local
control over property taxation for education purposes and to local control over
school finances and management. The second group of appellants further argues
that the EQIA violates a constitutional convention that has developed regarding
such matters, and that the delegation of control over the setting of education
tax rates to the Minister of Finance violates ss. 53 and 54 of the Constitution
Act, 1867 . The first group of appellants succeeded at trial in
establishing that separate school boards have a right to local taxation and
that the right had been violated but this holding was reversed on appeal. All
other claims failed both at trial and before the Court of Appeal.
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed. The new school funding and governance scheme is
constitutional.
Under s. 93 of the Constitution Act, 1867 ,
the province has exclusive jurisdiction to legislate with respect to education,
but it cannot prejudicially affect a right or privilege affecting denominational
schools enjoyed by a particular class of person by law in effect at the time of
Confederation. The animating principles of s. 93 are religious freedom
and equitable treatment. The aspects approach is used to determine whether a
right claimed is protected by s. 93 . This approach recognizes that
provinces may alter their education systems but prevents an expansion of the
original purpose of s. 93 . The rights guaranteed by s. 93 do not
replicate the law of 1867 verbatim.
The EQIA does not prejudicially affect the
right of separate schools to financial management and control. In Ontario, at
the time of Confederation, the Scott Act gave separate school trustees
the same powers and duties as common school trustees. These duties and powers,
however, were subject to a broad power of regulation by the Chief
Superintendent of Education for Upper Canada and the Council of Public
Instruction for Upper Canada. The province’s regulatory power has long been
enforced by the courts and the fact that it may have gone unexercised is
irrelevant. The aspects approach to the guarantees of s. 93(1) allows
Ontario to manage its denominational education system as it sees fit, so long
as it does not prejudicially affect a denominational right or privilege or a
non-denominational aspect necessary to deliver denominational elements of
education. The EQIA affects only secular aspects of education and does
not interfere with aspects of financial management and control necessary to
provide denominational elements of education. It applies to all schools alike
and impartially. As well, the power to take financial control of a board is
not prejudicial interference with a right to financial management and control.
The protections provided by ss. 257.52(1) and 257.40(5) of the amended Education
Act meet the requirements of s. 93(1) . Section 257.52(1)
specifically forbids the Minister from interfering with the denominational
aspects of a Roman Catholic school board, and whether such an interference has
occurred can be reviewed by the courts, pursuant to s. 257.40(5). It
should be noted also that provincial supervision of a school board cannot be
for an indefinite period of time.
The EQIA does not prejudicially affect the
right of separate schools to fair and equitable funding. The Scott Act
explicitly conferred on separate boards a legal right to tax their supporters
and local taxation was the dominant component of education funding in Ontario
until the enactment of the EQIA. The right to tax, however, is not
automatically protected by s. 93(1) simply because it existed in 1867. The
ability to tax supporters is not a right or privilege “with respect to
Denominational Schools” and s. 93(1) only protects the right to funding,
not the specific mechanism through which funding is delivered. The Scott
Act established local taxation and provincial grants as two funding
mechanisms. The province is generally free to alter the funding allocation
between these sources as it sees fit, provided that the source relied on delivers
sufficient funds to operate a denominational education system equivalent to the
public education system. Under the EQIA, local taxation remains, but
the Minister of Finance now sets the applicable tax rates throughout the
province. Provincial education grants are used to equalize education funding
between school boards. The evidence indicates that the new model will benefit
denominational boards. The new model treats separate schools in a like manner
as public schools and imports a standard for fair and equitable funding. It
also guarantees that minority language rights protected under s. 23 of the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms will be respected by education
funding in Ontario.
Since separate school boards have neither a right to
independent taxation nor an absolute right to management or control, no such
rights could possibly exist for public school boards. Subject to limited
protection in s. 93 of the Constitution Act, 1867 , they have no
constitutional status. The Scott Act and the Common Schools Act
use the public system as a benchmark for the rights of separate boards but
s. 93(1) does not protect the design of the public school system. In
addition, no constitutional convention protects the design of the public system
or a right of school boards to levy and determine property taxes.
Constitutional conventions relate to principles of responsible government, not
to how a power is exercised. They ensure that the legal framework of the
Constitution will operate in accordance with generally accepted principles, but
there is no generally accepted principle in Canada as to the design of the
public education system. Every province has a different design and Ontario’s
use of a particular design for an extended period of time reflects consistency
in public policy. It does not announce the arrival of a new principle of
responsible government. The recognition of a constitutional convention would be
inconsistent with the plenary power over education given to the provinces by s. 93 .
The EQIA meets the guarantee of “no taxation
without representation” provided in s. 53 of the Constitution Act, 1867 .
A delegation of the imposition of a tax is constitutional if express and
unambiguous language is used in making the delegation. If the legislature
expressly and clearly authorizes the imposition of a tax by a delegated body or
individual, then the delegated authority is not being used to impose a
completely new tax, but only to impose a tax that has been approved by the legislature.
The EQIA clearly and unambiguously authorizes taxation within the
enabling statute. It expressly authorizes the Minister of Finance to prescribe
tax rates for school purposes. The delegation of the setting of the rate takes
place within a detailed statutory framework that sets out the structure of the
tax, the tax base, and the principles for its imposition. Property taxes for
education purposes are intra vires the province. The delegation,
therefore, is constitutional. Section 54 of the Constitution Act, 1867
was not relied upon nor is it relevant.
Cases Cited
Referred to: Reference
Re Bill 30, An Act to amend the Education Act (Ont.), [1987] 1 S.C.R.
1148; City of Winnipeg v. Barrett, [1892] A.C. 445; Brophy v.
Attorney-General of Manitoba, [1895] A.C. 202; Ottawa Separate Schools
Trustees v. Mackell, [1917] A.C. 62; Ottawa Separate Schools Trustees v.
Ottawa Corporation, [1917] A.C. 76; Hirsch v. Protestant School
Commissioners of Montreal, [1928] A.C. 200; Roman Catholic Separate
School Trustees v. The King, [1928] A.C. 363; Attorney General of Quebec
v. Greater Hull School Board, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 575; Greater Montreal
Protestant School Board v. Quebec (Attorney General), [1989] 1 S.C.R. 377; Reference
Re Education Act (Que.), [1993] 2 S.C.R. 511; Ontario Home Builders’
Association v. York Region Board of Education, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 929; Adler
v. Ontario, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 609; Public School Boards’ Assn. of Alberta
v. Alberta (Attorney General), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 409, 2000 SCC 45; Waldman
v. Canada, 7 IHRR 368 (2000); Mahe v. Alberta, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 342; Reference
Re Public Schools Act (Man.), s. 79(3), (4) and (7), [1993] 1 S.C.R.
839; Arsenault‑Cameron v. Prince Edward Island, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 3,
2000 SCC 1; Re Ottawa Separate Schools (1917), 41 O.L.R. 259; Ontario
Public School Boards’ Assn. v. Ontario (Attorney General) (1997), 151
D.L.R. (4th) 346; Eurig Estate (Re), [1998] 2 S.C.R. 565; Ottawa
Separate School Trustees v. City of Ottawa (1915), 34 O.L.R. 624; Reference
Re Resolution to Amend the Constitution, [1981] 1 S.C.R. 753; Reference
Re Secession of Quebec, [1998] 2 S.C.R. 217; Reference Re Objection by
Quebec to a Resolution to Amend the Constitution, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 793; Reference
Re Agricultural Products Marketing Act, [1978] 2 S.C.R. 1198; Westbank
First Nation v. British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority, [1999] 3 S.C.R.
134; Executors of Will of Hon. Patrick Burns, deceased v. Minister of
National Revenue, [1947] S.C.R. 132; Attorney-General v. Wilts United
Dairies (1921), 37 T.L.R. 884, aff’d (1922), 91 L.J.K.B. 897; Gruen
Watch Co. of Canada Ltd. v. Attorney-General of Canada, [1950] O.R. 429; Bulova
Watch Co. v. Attorney-General of Canada, [1951] O.R. 360; The King v.
National Fish Co., [1931] Ex. C.R. 75; Hodge v. The Queen (1883), 9
App. Cas. 117.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Act respecting Common Schools
in Upper Canada, C.S.U.C. 1859, c. 64, ss. 27,
79, 106(1), (7), (9), (10), (11), (12), (13), (17), 103 to 113, 114 to 125.
Act to restore to Roman
Catholics in Upper Canada certain rights in respect to Separate Schools, S. Prov. C. 1863, 26 Vict., c. 5, ss. 7, 20, 26.
Administration of Justice Act, R.S.O.
1990, c. A.6.
Alberta Act, S.C. 1905, c. 3, s. 17 [reprinted in R.S.C. 1985, App.
II, No. 20].
Bill of Rights (1688).
Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms, ss. 23 , 29 .
Constitution Act, R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 62.
Constitution Act, 1867 , preamble, ss. 53 , 54 , 90 , 92(2) , 93 , 93A .
Constitution Act, 1982, s. 45 .
Constitution Amendment, 1997
(Québec), SI/97-141.
Constitution Amendment, 1998
(Newfoundland Act), SI/98-25.
Education Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.2 [am. 1997, c. 31], ss. 234(1),
(2), (3), (14), Division B, 257.7, 257.12(1)(b), (3) to (5), 257.19, Part IX Division
D, 257.30(1), (5), (6), 257.31, 257.33 to 257.49, 257.50, 257.52, Division E,
Division F, 257.106, 257.107.
Education Quality Improvement
Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, c. 31.
Manitoba Act, 1870, S.C. 1870, c. 3, s. 22 [reprinted in R.S.C. 1985, App.
II, No. 8].
Saskatchewan Act, S.C. 1905, c. 42, s. 17 [reprinted in R.S.C. 1985, App.
II, No. 21].
Authors Cited
Kelsey, Brian A. An
Educator’s Guide to Funding and Governance. Aurora, Ont.: Aurora
Professional Press, 1999.
Small, Joan. “Money Bills and the
Use of the Royal Recommendation in Canada: Practice versus Principle?” (1995),
27 Ottawa L. Rev. 33.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal
(1999), 44 O.R. (3d) 7, 120 O.A.C. 116, 172 D.L.R. (4th) 193, dismissing
appeals by the appellants and allowing an appeal by the respondent from a
judgment of Cumming J. (1998), 162 D.L.R. (4th) 257, [1998] O.J. No. 2939 (QL),
declaring the Education Quality Improvement Act, 1997 unconstitutional
in part and declaring the Education Act of no force and effect in part.
Appeal dismissed.
Paul J. J. Cavalluzzo and Fay C. Faraday, for the appellants the Ontario
English Catholic Teachers’ Association, Marshall Jarvis, Claire Ross and
Annemarie Ross.
Brian A. Kelsey, Q.C.,
Maurice A. Green, Michael A. Hines and Elizabeth J.
Shilton, for the appellants the Ontario Public School Boards’ Association,
the Toronto District School Board, the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’
Federation, the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario, Joleene Kemp, David
Edwards and Robert Churchill.
Janet E. Minor, Robert E.
Charney, and Michel Y. Hélie, for the respondent.
Monique Rousseau, for
the intervener the Attorney General of Quebec.
Eugene B. Szach
and Denis Guénette, for the intervener the Attorney General of Manitoba.
Timothy Leadem, for the
intervener the Attorney General of British Columbia.
Robert C. Maybank,
for the intervener the Attorney General for Alberta.
Peter D. Lauwers,
for the intervener the Ontario Catholic School Trustees’ Association.
Paul S. Rouleau,
for the interveners the Association franco-ontarienne des conseils scolaires
catholiques and the Association des conseillers(ères) des écoles publiques de
l’Ontario.
James E. Redmond, Q.C.,
and K. P. Feehan, for the interveners the Alberta Catholic
School Trustees’ Association, the Board of Lethbridge Roman Catholic Separate
School District No. 9 and Dwayne Berlando.
Robert G. Richards,
Q.C., for the interveners the Boards of Education of Regina School
Division No. 4, Saskatchewan Rivers School Division No. 119, Swift Current
School Division No. 94, Weyburn School Division No. 97, Yorkton School Division
No. 93, Moose Jaw School Division No. 1, Saskatoon School Division No. 13,
and Estevan School Division No. 95.
Dale Gibson, for the
interveners the Public School Boards’ Association of Alberta, the Board of
Trustees of the Edmonton School District No. 7 and Cathryn Staring
Parrish.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
1
Iacobucci J. -- In many
countries, education issues are matters of public policy, to be decided by
democratic debate. In Canada, we are in the rather unusual position of having
certain education rights constitutionally entrenched in s. 93 of the Constitution
Act, 1867 . This state of affairs is the product of our history, stemming
from what this Court has referred to as “a solemn pact resulting from the
bargaining which made Confederation possible”: Reference Re Bill 30, An Act
to amend the Education Act (Ont.), [1987] 1 S.C.R. 1148, at p. 1173, per
Wilson J.
2
This appeal again raises the scope and
content of the rights protected under s. 93 in light of recent legislation
passed by the legislature of Ontario. Before dealing with the issues in this
appeal, it may be helpful to put this case in a wider context.
I. Background
A. General
3
Section 93 of the Constitution Act, 1867 gives effect to the
historic compromise that was reached regarding education in Canada. It confers
on the provincial legislatures the plenary power to enact laws in relation to
education, subject to the rights of denominational schools. Denominational
education rights are protected primarily by s. 93(1) , the provision at issue in
this appeal. Section 93(1) reads:
93. In and for each Province the Legislature
may exclusively make Laws in relation to Education, subject and according to
the following Provisions: --
(1) Nothing in any such Law shall prejudicially
affect any Right or Privilege with respect to Denominational Schools which any
Class of Persons have by Law in the Province at the Union:
When the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms was drafted
in the early 1980s, the rights protected by s. 93 were specifically preserved.
Section 29 of the Charter reads:
29.
Nothing in this Charter abrogates or derogates from any rights or privileges
guaranteed by or under the Constitution of Canada in respect of denominational,
separate or dissentient schools.
4
Section 93 applies directly to Ontario, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick,
Prince Edward Island, and British Columbia. However, only Ontario had
denominational education rights conferred “by law” at the relevant time, and so
the guarantees provided by s. 93(1) are of no importance in Nova Scotia, New
Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and British Columbia. A modified version of
s. 93 applies to the western provinces
of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta: s. 22 of the Manitoba Act, 1870,
S.C. 1870, c. 3; s. 17 of the Saskatchewan Act, S.C. 1905, c. 42, and s.
17 of the Alberta Act, S.C. 1905, c. 3. As a result of recent
constitutional amendments, Quebec and Newfoundland
have new constitutional frameworks for education rights. Quebec has removed
the protection of denominational education rights altogether, by amending the
Constitution so that ss. 93(1) through (4) no longer apply to Quebec: Constitution
Amendment, 1997 (Québec), SI/97-141; s. 93A of the Constitution Act,
1867 . Newfoundland no longer has denominational schools, but instead
guarantees the provision of courses in religion that are not specific to a
religious denomination and guarantees that religious observances shall be
permitted in a public school where requested by parents: Constitution
Amendment, 1998 (Newfoundland Act), SI/98-25.
5
The rights protected by s. 93 , or its equivalent in certain provinces,
have been the source of considerable litigation
throughout our country’s history, both domestically and, more recently,
internationally. See, e.g., City of Winnipeg v. Barrett, [1892] A.C.
445 (P.C.); Brophy v. Attorney-General of Manitoba, [1895] A.C. 202
(P.C.); Ottawa Separate Schools Trustees v. Mackell, [1917] A.C. 62
(P.C.); Ottawa Separate Schools Trustees v. Ottawa Corporation, [1917]
A.C. 76 (P.C.); Hirsch v. Protestant School Commissioners of Montreal,
[1928] A.C. 200 (P.C.); Roman Catholic Separate School Trustees v. The King,
[1928] A.C. 363 (P.C.); Attorney General of Quebec v. Greater Hull School
Board, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 575; Reference Re Bill 30, supra; Greater
Montreal Protestant School Board v. Quebec (Attorney General), [1989] 1
S.C.R. 377 (“G.M.P.S.B.”); Reference Re Education Act (Que.),
[1993] 2 S.C.R. 511 (“Quebec Education Reference”); Ontario Home
Builders’ Association v. York Region Board of Education, [1996] 2 S.C.R.
929; Adler v. Ontario, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 609; Public School Boards’
Assn. of Alberta v. Alberta (Attorney General), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 409, 2000
SCC 45, (“Alberta Public Schools”); and, Waldman v. Canada, 7
IHRR 368 (2000).
B. The Background of this Appeal
6
In 1997, the Ontario government, represented on this appeal by the
respondent Attorney General for Ontario, passed Bill 160, the Education
Quality Improvement Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, c. 31 (“EQIA”).
The EQIA amended the Education Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.2, to
create a new governance and funding model for all school boards in Ontario,
including both public and separate (denominational) boards. To address a
disparity of revenues between school boards, both between urban and rural
boards and between separate and public boards, the EQIA allocates funds
on a per-pupil basis. It also removes the ability of school boards to set
property tax rates for education purposes, and centralizes this taxation power
in the hands of the Minister of Finance. At the same time, the EQIA
limits the power of school boards to control their budgets and expenditures,
although it guarantees local control over denominational expenditures.
Finally, the EQIA allows the Minister of Education and Training to take
control of a school board temporarily if financial problems arise, again
subject to certain protections, which are set
out below.
7
Two challenges to the constitutionality of the EQIA were
initiated in the Ontario Court (General Division) and were heard together. One
challenge was brought by separate school supporters through the Ontario English
Catholic Teachers’ Association group of appellants (“OECTA appellants”), the
other by public school supporters through the Ontario Public School Boards’
Association group of appellants (“OPSBA appellants”). The OECTA represents
over 30,000 separate school teachers in the province, while the OPSBA
represents over 90 Ontario public school boards. Other organizations in the
OPSBA group of appellants are the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’
Federation, representing over 35,000 public secondary school teachers in the
province, the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario, representing over 60,000 public elementary school teachers
and education workers, and the Toronto District School Board.
8
Both groups of appellants argue that the new funding and governance
model violates s. 93(1) of the Constitution Act, 1867 because it
interferes with claimed rights to local control over property taxation for
education purposes and to local control over school finances and management.
The OPSBA appellants further argue that the EQIA violates a
constitutional convention that has developed regarding such matters, and that
the delegation of control over the setting of education tax rates to the
Minister of Finance violates ss. 53 and 54 of the Constitution Act, 1867 .
These sections require, in part, that bills imposing a tax must originate in
the House of Commons, and they apply to provincial legislatures by virtue of s.
90 of the Constitution Act, 1867 .
9
The Catholic community in Ontario is apparently
divided as to the constitutional validity of the EQIA. The intervener
Ontario Catholic School Trustees’ Association (“OCSTA”) represents 29
English-language separate school boards in the province. The intervener
Association franco-ontarienne des conseils scolaires catholiques represents
French-language separate school trustees. Both of these interveners support
the respondent’s position that the EQIA is constitutionally valid.
While there are also differences amongst public school supporters on this
issue, the only non-governmental intervener supporting the respondent is the
Association des conseillers(ères) des écoles publiques de l’Ontario,
representing French-language public school trustees in Ontario.
10
The OECTA appellants succeeded at trial in establishing a right of
separate school boards to local taxation for education purposes, and in
establishing that this right had been violated by the EQIA. However,
this holding was reversed on appeal. All other claims failed both at trial and
before the Ontario Court of Appeal.
II. An Overview of Relevant Constitutional and Legislative
Provisions
11
Section 93(1) of the Constitution Act, 1867 protects only those
denominational education rights provided by law as of 1867. In Ontario, these
rights were primarily conferred by An Act to restore to Roman Catholics in
Upper Canada certain rights in respect to Separate Schools, S. Prov. C.
1863, 26 Vict., c. 5 (“Scott Act”), the last statute pertaining to
separate schools enacted in Ontario prior to Confederation, and An Act respecting
Common Schools in Upper Canada, C.S.U.C. 1859, c. 64 (“Common Schools
Act”). Section 7 of the Scott Act empowered separate school
trustees to tax their supporters and gave separate school trustees the same
powers as public school trustees:
7. The Trustees of Separate Schools forming
a body corporate under this Act, shall have the power to impose, levy and
collect School rates or subscriptions, upon and from persons sending children
to, or subscribing towards the support of such Schools, and shall have all the
powers in respect of Separate Schools, that the Trustees of Common Schools have
and possess under the provisions of the Act relating to Common Schools.
Section 20
entitled separate schools to a share of provincial education grants:
20. Every Separate School shall be entitled
to a share in the fund annually granted by the Legislature of this Province for
the support of Common Schools, and shall be entitled also to a share in all
other public grants, investments and allotments for Common School purposes now
made or hereafter to be made by the Province or the Municipal authorities,
according to the average number of pupils attending such school during the
twelve next preceding months, or during the number of months which may have
elapsed from the establishment of a new Separate School, as compared with the
whole average number of pupils attending School in the same City, Town, Village
or Township.
Section 26 subjected separate schools to provincial regulation:
26. The Roman Catholic Separate Schools,
(with their Registers), shall be subject to such inspection, as may be directed
from time to time, by the Chief Superintendent of Education, and shall be
subject also, to such regulations, as may be imposed, from time to time, by the
Council of Public Instruction for Upper Canada.
The relevant provisions of the Common Schools Act affirmed
that school boards and municipal governments had the ability, and indeed were
required, to raise funds for education purposes through local taxation at the
time of Confederation: ss. 27(10), 79(12), 123 and 124. Trustees were also
given considerable scope to manage the local education system: ss. 27 and 79.
However, the Common Schools Act also established two central education
authorities and set out their powers: the Chief Superintendent of Education for
Upper Canada (ss. 103 to 113) and the Council of Public Instruction for Upper
Canada (ss. 114 to 25). The provisions of the Common Schools Act will
be examined in greater detail below.
12
The amendments made to Ontario’s Education Act by the EQIA
are lengthy and complex. I will refer only to those sections necessary to
understand the central issues of this appeal. Part IX of the new Education
Act is entitled “Finance” and contains most of the contested provisions.
The new funding model provides five sources from which school boards can derive
revenue (see Brian A. Kelsey, An Educator’s Guide to Funding and Governance
(1999), at p. 118):
(i) residential property tax revenue
from their own school supporters;
(ii) business property tax revenue
shared between coterminous boards on the basis of student enrolment;
(iii) provincial grants, which equalize
board disparities in revenues;
(iv) education development charges; and
(v) other sources, such as tuition fees
from non-residents and the rental, lease or sale of surplus properties.
13
With regard to education taxes, s. 257.106 of the new Education Act
declares inoperative the previous ability of all school boards in the province
to raise funds through local taxation. Pursuant to s. 257.7, property tax
rates are still levied for school purposes and collected by municipalities.
However, s. 257.12(1)(b) now empowers the Minister of Finance to make
regulations “prescribing the tax rates for school purposes for the purposes of
section 257.7”. The prescribed rate may vary among municipalities and
properties within a municipality: see ss. 257.12(3) to (5). Residential
taxpayers continue to designate their education taxes for either the public or
separate system, meaning that the denominational tax base has not been altered
by the EQIA.
14
Turning to education grants, we see
that s. 234(1) of the new Education Act empowers the Lieutenant Governor
in Council to “make regulations governing the making of grants for educational
purposes from money appropriated by the Legislature”. Of particular
constitutional importance, subss. (2) and (3) of s. 234 restrict the exercise
of this power. These provisions read:
234. . . .
(2) Regulations made under subsection (1)
shall ensure that the legislation and regulations governing education funding
operate in a fair and non-discriminatory manner,
(a) as between English-language public
boards and English-language Roman Catholic boards; and
(b) as between French-language public
district school boards and French-language separate district school boards.
(3) Regulations made under subsection (1)
shall ensure that the legislation and regulations governing education funding
operate so as to respect the rights given by section 23 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms .
15
It should be recalled that s. 23 of the Charter protects minority
language education rights in Canada. See Mahe v. Alberta, [1990] 1
S.C.R. 342; Reference Re Public Schools Act (Man.), s. 79(3), (4) and (7),
[1993] 1 S.C.R. 839; and Arsenault‑Cameron v. Prince Edward Island,
[2000] 1 S.C.R. 3, 2000 SCC 1. The appellants have not raised any arguments
with respect to the guarantees provided by s. 23 , and there has been no
suggestion that the EQIA violates s. 23 . As a result, this appeal deals
only with denominational rights under s. 93(1) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ,
and nothing stated herein is intended to affect s. 23 rights.
16
The guarantees provided in ss. 234(2) and (3) apply not only to grants
made under s. 234(1), but also to revenue available to a school board from tax
rates levied under Division B of Part IX of the Education Act
(“Education Taxes”) and education development charges under Division E of Part
IX of the Education Act (“Education Development Charges”): s. 234(14).
Furthermore, s. 257.107 requires that a committee be struck to report by
December 31, 2003 on whether “the legislation and regulations governing
education funding meet the standard set out in subsection 234 (2) of the Education
Act”.
17
The grants themselves consist of foundation grants, special purpose
grants, and pupil accommodation grants. Foundation grants are allocated on a
per-pupil basis and are intended to cover the basic cost of providing an
educational program for one school year (see Kelsey, supra, at pp.
138-40). The per-pupil funding rate is the same for all school boards,
although it is higher for secondary students than for elementary students.
Special purpose grants are allocated for a wide range of particular needs,
including special education, language needs, small or remote school needs, adult
education, teacher compensation, transportation, administration and governance,
early learning, and debt charges (see Kelsey, supra, at pp. 140-51).
Pupil accommodation grants are essentially focussed on funding infrastructure
needs, including school operation and renewal, new pupil places, and capital
debt servicing. All grants are designated for either classroom or
non-classroom spending. Funds designated for non-classroom spending can be
re-allocated for classroom spending categories, but funds designated as
classroom spending, as well as certain special purpose grants, cannot be
re-assigned. The new funding model also determines the total annual funding a
school board is to receive, thereby providing a ceiling on board expenditures
for the year.
18
Division D of Part IX of the new Education Act provides for the
supervision of school boards’ financial affairs by the provincial Ministry of
Education and Training. Under s. 257.30(1), the Minister of Education and
Training may direct an investigation of the financial affairs of a board if:
(a) the board has a deficit for a fiscal year; (b) the board fails to pay
certain debentures, debt instruments or interest due; (c) the board fails to
pay any other debts or liabilities when due and the default is occasioned from
financial difficulties affecting the board; or (d) if “the Minister has
concerns about the board’s ability to meet its financial obligations”. The
investigator reports to the Minister (s. 257.30(5)), but “may not recommend
that control and charge over the administration of the affairs of the board be
vested in the Ministry unless the investigation discloses evidence of financial
default or probable financial default, of a deficit or a probable deficit or of
serious financial mismanagement” (s. 257.30(6)). After reviewing the
investigator’s report, the Minister may “give any directions to the board that
he or she considers advisable” or may advise the Lieutenant Governor in Council
to vest financial control of the board with the Ministry: s. 257.31. If the
Lieutenant Governor in Council acts on this recommendation, the Minister
assumes full control over the board: ss. 257.33 to 257.49.
19
This power is also subject to important limitations. Most
significantly, the Minister cannot interfere with: “(a) the denominational
aspects of a Roman Catholic board; (b) the denominational aspects of a
Protestant separate school board; or (c) the linguistic or cultural aspects of
a French-language district school board”: s. 257.52. Although the government
has attempted to shield the exercise of the Minister’s Division D powers from
judicial scrutiny by enacting a privative clause (s. 257.40), an exception is
provided in s. 257.40(5) for the review of decisions impacting the guarantees
in s. 257.52. A further limitation on the exercise of Division D powers is
provided by s. 257.50, which requires the Lieutenant Governor in Council to
revoke the Minister’s control over a board if “the Lieutenant Governor in
Council is of the opinion that the affairs of a board no longer need to be
administered under [Division D]” or if the board no longer has a deficit.
III. Judicial History
A. Ontario
Court (General Division) (1998), 162 D.L.R. (4th) 257
20
In extensive and lucid reasons, Cumming
J. held that the EQIA did not interfere with separate schools’ right to
management and control. Although he concluded at p. 283 that “[i]nherent to
the right of a separate school system is the right of management and control”,
he also noted that the Scott Act imposed limitations upon the
independent management of separate schools, primarily by subjecting separate
schools to regulations imposed by a central education authority. Furthermore,
s. 93(1) primarily protects denominational rights. Cumming J. therefore concluded
at p. 286 that:
... there is not otherwise any evidence of any prejudicial effect on a denominational
right because of the strictures upon the powers of management imposed by Bill
160. . . . The prescriptive elements of the new funding model will direct
board spending to a considerable degree. However, there is nothing to suggest
that Catholic boards will be prevented from taking denominational matters into
account in all aspects of their operations, such as teacher hiring,
curriculum, programs and in respect of capital facilities. [Emphasis in
original.]
21
With regard to a right to tax, Cumming J. held that s. 7 of the Scott
Act guaranteed separate school boards the right to levy taxes upon separate
school supporters to meet expenditure needs. He concluded at p. 297 that the
particular form of such a tax is not essential, but that “the independent
right to finance by raising money by the taxation of separate school
supporters . . . is critical to the prime objective of guaranteeing the
autonomy of a separate, denominational school system” (emphasis in original).
In his opinion, the EQIA, although respecting the right to proportional
funding as guaranteed by s. 20 of the Scott Act, violates the right to
independent financing as guaranteed by s. 7. While the new funding model may
presently benefit denominational schools, Cumming J. concluded at p. 298 that
it was unconstitutional because it “makes the Roman Catholic community hostage
to the provincial government as to the extent of financing of the
separate school system” (emphasis in original). In his view, Catholics in the
province are constitutionally guaranteed the right to finance a Catholic
education system from within their own community. He therefore declared the EQIA
to be of no force and effect insofar as it interferes with this right.
22
Cumming J. rejected the remaining arguments of the appellants. He held
that the supervisory powers conferred on the Minister by Division D of the new Education
Act meet the requirements set out in Ottawa Separate Schools Trustees
v. Ottawa Corporation, supra, and in Re Ottawa Separate
Schools (1917), 41 O.L.R. 259 (S.C., App. Div.), namely that there “are
defined and assessable standards, both for the imposition and removal of a
vesting order” (p. 306). He rejected the argument that a right to tax must
also exist for public school supporters, on the grounds that s. 93 does not
guarantee “mirror equality” between the two education systems. He agreed with
Campbell J. in Ontario Public School Boards’ Assn. v. Ontario (Attorney
General) (1997), 151 D.L.R. (4th) 346 (Ont. Ct. (Gen. Div.)) that Adler,
supra, a leading case on this issue, “is a shield to protect the public
school system against Charter challenges . . . not a sword to win
denominational rights for public schools” (p. 309). Cumming J. also held that
there is no constitutional convention protecting the design of the public
education system in Ontario and that, even if there was, a constitutional
convention cannot be used to invalidate express legislation. Lastly, Cumming
J. concluded that the EQIA does not violate ss. 53 and 54 of the Constitution
Act, 1867 as these provisions require only that the delegation of a taxing
power be express, a condition met by the legislation.
B. Ontario
Court of Appeal (1999), 44 O.R. (3d) 7
23
In reasons for judgment
authored by the court, McMurtry C.J.O., Brooke, Abella, Goudge and Borins JJ.A.
dismissed the appellants’ appeal, but allowed the respondent’s appeal regarding
the right of separate school boards to tax their supporters. Employing the
aspects analysis to the guarantees of s. 93(1), as reviewed by this Court in G.M.P.S.B.,
supra, the Court of Appeal held
at p. 21 that the “right to tax is clearly a non-denominational aspect of denominational
schools . . . nor does it serve denominational ends that other ways of funding
the separate system would not”. The court also noted that, historically, the
right to tax did not provide more than limited financial autonomy to separate
school boards. As the EQIA provides greater funding to Catholic schools
than they enjoyed before, it cannot be said to prejudice their rights under s.
93 . The court therefore concluded that s. 93(1) guarantees only the funding
of denominational schools, not a right of separate school boards to tax their
supporters, and reversed the
learned trial judge on this point.
24
The court rejected all of the other grounds of appeal. It denied an
independent right to management and control, as “in 1867 neither public nor
separate school boards had unconstrained autonomy in spending decisions” (p.
24). Since the new funding model limits the spending power of trustees only in
relation to matters that are entirely non-denominational, the court held that
the EQIA had no prejudicial effect on the rights guaranteed by s.
93(1). Largely for the reasons given by Cumming J., the court agreed that the
Division D supervisory powers given to the Minister of Education and Training
were constitutional, noting at p. 30 that these powers are “sufficiently
defined and precise” and therefore do not have a prejudicial effect. Having
rejected the OECTA appellants’ claim to a right to tax and a right of
independent management and control, the court held that no such rights could possibly
exist for public school boards. It also rejected the OPSBA appellants’
argument regarding a constitutional convention in this area, for the reasons
given by Cumming J.
25
Lastly, the court held that the delegation of the setting of property
tax rates for education purposes to the Minister of Finance did not contravene
s. 53 of the Constitution Act, 1867 . Unlike Cumming J., the court had
the benefit of the decision of this Court in Eurig Estate (Re), [1998] 2
S.C.R. 565, in reaching its decision. The court held that, although the tax is
not imposed until the Minister fixes the applicable rates, it nevertheless
meets the requirement set out by the majority in Eurig, at para. 28,
that “all provincial bills for the imposition of any tax must originate in the
legislature”. As the Minister is not imposing a tax ab initio when
setting the rates, but is instead imposing a tax as authorized by legislation,
the court concluded that the requirements of s. 53 were met by the EQIA.
IV. Issues
26
The following constitutional questions were stated by this Court when
leave to appeal was granted on October 14, 1999:
1. Do Part IX Division B, Part IX
Division F, and, in particular, ss. 257.7, 257.12, 257.19 and 257.106 of the Education
Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.2, as amended by the Education Quality
Improvement Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, c. 31, prejudicially affect rights held
under s. 93(1) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
2. Do ss. 231, 232 and 234 of the Education
Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.2, as amended by the Education Quality
Improvement Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, c. 31, and the education Funding Formula
enacted pursuant to s. 234 of the Education Act and presently embodied
in O.Reg. 287/98 and O.Reg. 214/99, prejudicially affect rights held under s.
93(1) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
3. Does Part IX, Division D of the Education
Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.2, as amended by the Education Quality
Improvement Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, c. 31, prejudicially affect rights held
under s. 93(1) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
4. If the answer to questions 1, 2 or
3 is in the affirmative with respect to Roman Catholic separate school rights,
are those provisions, or any of them, also invalid with respect to public
school supporters and public school boards, by virtue of either s. 93 of the Constitution
Act, 1867 , or constitutional convention?
5. Does s. 257.12(1)(b) of the Education
Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.2, as amended by the Education Quality Improvement
Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, c. 31, contravene the preamble, s. 53 , or s. 54 of
the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
27
In answering these questions, I wish to begin by reviewing briefly the
jurisprudence on the rights protected under s. 93 . Having done this, I will
then discuss the issues of financial management and control, the right to tax,
the rights of public school boards, and the delegation of taxation powers.
V. Analysis
A. The
Protections of Section 93
28
The original purpose of s. 93 was to give the provinces plenary
jurisdiction over education while protecting the religious education of the
Protestant minority in Quebec and the Catholic minority outside Quebec. As the
Lord Chancellor stated in Brophy, supra, at p. 214, these
minority communities
regarded it as essential that the education of their children should be
in accordance with the teaching of their Church, and considered that such an
education could not be obtained in public schools designed for all the members
of the community alike, whatever their creed, but could only be secured in
schools conducted under the influence and guidance of the authorities of their
Church.
The animating
principles were, and are, religious freedom and equitable treatment. A
detailed history of s. 93 , as well as the relevant pre-Confederation education
legislation in Ontario, is set out by Wilson J. in Reference Re Bill 30,
supra, at pp. 1168-87.
29
The plenary power over education given to the provinces by the opening
words of s. 93 has been interpreted broadly by the courts: see, e.g., City
of Winnipeg, supra, at p. 456, and Alberta Public Schools, supra,
at paras. 35-37. But the plenary power is not absolute. It must be exercised
within the limits imposed by subss. (1), (3) and (4) of s. 93 of the Constitution
Act, 1867 (s. 93(2) is no longer of importance, as it applied only to
Quebec and is now inapplicable as a result of s. 93A of the Constitution
Act, 1867 ). The Lord Chancellor summarized the scope of the plenary power in
Brophy, supra, at pp. 221-22:
The power conferred is not absolute, but limited. It is exerciseable
only “subject and according to the following provisions.” The sub-sections
which follow, therefore, whatever be their true construction, define the conditions
under which alone the Provincial Legislature may legislate in relation to
education, and indicate the limitations imposed on, and the exceptions from,
their power of exclusive legislation. Their right to legislate is not indeed,
properly speaking, exclusive, for in the case specified in sub-sect. 3 the
Parliament of Canada is authorized to legislate on the same subject.
30
To engage the protections of s. 93(1) , the following factors must be
established (as referred to by Chouinard J. in Greater Hull, supra,
at p. 582):
[translation]
(a) there must be a right or privilege affecting a denominational
school;
(b) enjoyed by a particular class of persons;
(c) by law;
(d) in effect at the time of the Union;
(e) and which is prejudicially affected.
In addition,
as will be discussed below, the right prejudicially affected must be one
relating to denominational education, or those non-denominational aspects
necessary to deliver the denominational elements of education: see G.M.P.S.B.,
supra, at p. 411.
31
It has long been settled that Roman Catholics in Ontario constitute a
“class of persons” within the meaning of s. 93(1) : Ottawa Separate Schools
Trustees v. Mackell, supra, at p. 69. The starting point in
analysing a s. 93(1) claim is therefore to determine whether the right or
privilege being claimed was in fact provided by law in the province at the
applicable date. Although this approach involves analysing a “snapshot” of the
law as it stood in 1867 (the relevant date in Ontario), the education system of
a province is not frozen in time. In Ottawa Separate School Trustees v.
City of Ottawa (1915), 34 O.L.R. 624 (H.C. Div.), at p. 630, Meredith
C.J.C.P. stated that separate schools must not be “left forever in the
educational wilderness of the enactments in force in 1867”. Instead, “[t]he
machinery may be altered, the educational methods may be changed, from time to
time, to keep pace with advanced educational systems”. In Hirsch, supra,
the Privy Council shared this view. Viscount Cave L.C. wrote, at p. 215, that
s. 93
does not purport to stereotype the educational system of the Province
as then existing. On the contrary, it expressly authorizes the Provincial
Legislature to make laws in regard to education subject only to the provisions
of the section; and it is difficult to see how the Legislature can effectively
exercise the power so entrusted to it unless it is to have a large measure of
freedom to meet new circumstances and needs as they arise.
Similarly,
this Court noted in Ontario Home
Builders’, supra, at para. 73, that s. 93(1) does not turn the
legislative provisions with regard to denominational education in force in 1867
into Procrustean obligations, with which our present education system must be
rigidly forced to conform.
32
Instead, this Court employs “a purposive approach to s. 93 ”: see the Reference
Re Bill 30, supra, at p. 1175, per Wilson J. Such an
approach gives provincial legislatures the flexibility to use the plenary power
granted to them in s. 93 to alter their education systems. At the same time, the jurisprudence reveals
that care has been exercised to avoid using the purposive approach to expand
the original purpose of s. 93 . Beetz J., for a majority of this Court in G.M.P.S.B.,
supra, at p. 401, rejected an approach to s. 93(1) that would
“improperly amplify the provision’s purpose” and thereby transform s. 93(1)
into “a blanket affirmation of freedom of religion or freedom of conscience”.
Using the properly confined purposive approach, Beetz J. concluded, at p. 402,
that “the law in force ‘at the Union’ cannot on its own set the content of the
constitutional right in s. 93(1)”. In other words, the rights guaranteed by s.
93(1) do not replicate the law word-for-word as it stood in 1867. It is the
broader purpose of the laws in force which continues to be protected.
Therefore, s. 93(1) should be viewed as protecting the denominational aspects
of education, as well as those non-denominational aspects necessary to deliver
the denominational elements. As Beetz J. stated in G.M.P.S.B., at p.
411:
In other words, constitutional protection “with respect to
Denominational Schools” has both denominational and non-denominational
components.
This approach
is commonly referred to as the “aspects analysis” or the “aspects approach”.
33
Dickson C.J. summarized the aspects approach in Mahe, supra,
at p. 382:
[Subsection 93(1)] protects powers over denominational
aspects of education and those non‑denominational aspects which are
related to denominational concerns which were enjoyed at the time of
Confederation. The phrase does not support the protection of powers enjoyed in
respect of non‑denominational aspects of education except in so far as is
necessary to give effect to denominational concerns. [Emphasis deleted.]
The aspects
approach is not new. It was employed by the Privy Council as early as 1917. In Ottawa Separate Schools Trustees v. Mackell, supra,
at p. 71, Lord Buckmaster L.C. stated (with regard to language rights, which
were not then constitutionally protected):
The schools must be conducted in
accordance with the regulations, and their Lordships can find nothing in the
statute to take away from the authority that had power to issue regulations the
power of directing in what language education is to be given. If, therefore,
the trustees of the common schools would be bound to obey a regulation which
directed that education should, subject to certain restrictions, be given in
either English or French, the trustees of the separate schools would also be
bound to obey a regulation of the same character affecting their school,
provided that it does not interfere with a right or privilege reserved under
the Act of 1867, i.e., a right or privilege attached to denominational teaching.
[Emphasis added.]
34
Understandably, not all
legislation in relation to education will interfere with the guarantees of s.
93 . As Chouinard J. stated in Greater Hull, supra, at p. 585:
Denominational status applies in its context, and
though some legislation which does not prejudicially affect a right or
privilege conferred by law at the time of the Union is conceivable, other
legislation will have such an effect.
Legislation
dealing with education has been held to be intra vires in a number of
cases: see, e.g., City of Winnipeg, supra; Ottawa Separate
Schools Trustees v. Mackell, supra; Reference Re Bill 30, supra;
G.M.P.S.B., supra; Quebec Education Reference, supra;
and Alberta Public Schools, supra. The courts have also long
been careful to separate policy matters from legal issues. In City of
Winnipeg, for instance, Lord Macnaghten stated, at p. 459: “With the policy
of the Act of 1890 their Lordships are not concerned.” See also Brophy,
supra, at p. 226, and Hirsch, supra, at p. 216. On the
other hand, s. 93 is absolute in its protection of denominational education
rights, and legislation has been held to be ultra vires which interferes
with those rights: see, e.g., Ottawa Separate Schools Trustees v. Ottawa
Corporation, supra, and Greater Hull, supra.
B. The Claimed
Right to Financial Management and Control
35
Applying these principles to the instant case, we must begin by examining whether there was a right or
privilege entitling denominational schools in Ontario to local control over
taxation or to financial management and control at the time of Confederation.
Section 7 of the Scott Act gave separate school trustees “all the powers
in respect of Separate Schools, that the Trustees of Common Schools have and
possess under the provisions of the Act relating to Common Schools”. Section
27 of the Common Schools Act set out the duties and powers of trustees
in township school sections, while s. 79 did the same for trustees in cities,
towns and villages.
36
These included the power or duty to acquire and hold property (ss. 27(3)
and 79(4)), “manage or dispose of such property, and all moneys or income for
Common School purposes” (s. 79(5)), build and repair schools (ss. 27(4) and
79(7)), employ teachers and set their salaries (ss. 27(8) and 79(8)), levy and
collect property taxes for education purposes, or to apply to the municipal
government to have the municipality do so (ss. 27(12) and 79(12)), permit all
local residents between the ages of five and 21 to attend a school, subject to
good behaviour and the payment of the fees or rates required to be paid on
their behalf (ss. 27(16) and 79(18)), visit schools and ensure compliance with
the authorized regulations (ss. 27(17) and 79(16)), supply the textbooks
authorized by the Council of Public Instruction (ss. 27(18) and 79(15)),
establish a library and appoint a librarian (ss. 27(19) and 79(15)), and report
to constituents (ss. 27(21) and 79(16)), to the applicable superintendent (ss.
27(23) and 79(17)) or to the municipality (s. 79(11)).
37
These duties and powers, however, were subject to a broad power of
regulation by the Chief Superintendent of Education for Upper Canada and the
Council of Public Instruction for Upper Canada. Section 26 of the Scott Act
made the separate schools subject to inspection by the Chief Superintendent and
to “such regulations, as may be imposed, from time to time, by the Council of
Public Instruction for Upper Canada”. The Common Schools Act
established both the office of the Chief Superintendent and the institution of
the Council of Public Instruction, and set out their duties and powers. The
Chief Superintendent was given the duty or power to apportion the annual
provincial education grant (s. 106(1)), ensure provincial funds were properly
spent (s. 106(7)), appoint school inspectors (s. 106(9)), recommend textbooks
to the Council of Public Instruction for approval (ss. 106(10) and (13)),
promote the establishment of school libraries (s. 106(11)), disseminate
education information, including information regarding the design of schools
(s. 106(12)), and report to the Governor on education finances in the province
and on “suggestions for improving the Common Schools and the Common School
laws, and promoting education generally as he may deem useful and expedient”
(s. 106(17)). The Council of Public Instruction consisted of not more than
nine members appointed by the Governor. Section 119(4) of the Common
Schools Act gave the Council the sweeping power to make regulations “for
the organization, government and discipline of Common Schools, for the
classification of Schools and Teachers, and for School Libraries throughout
Upper Canada”.
38
This provincial power of regulation has long been recognized by the
courts. As Dickson C.J. stated in Mahe, supra, at pp. 382-83:
The transfer of the powers in respect of management and
control thus amounts to the regulation of a non‑denominational
aspect of education, namely, the language of instruction, a form of regulation
which the courts have long held to be valid: see Brophy v. Attorney‑General
of Manitoba, [1895] A.C. 202; Ottawa Roman Catholic Separate Schools
Trustees v. Mackell, [1917] A.C. 62; and Ottawa Roman Catholic Separate
Schools Trustees v. Quebec Bank, [1920] A.C. 230. I note that this
conclusion was also reached by the Ontario Court of Appeal in Reference Re
Education Act of Ontario [(1984), 10 D.L.R. (4th) 491]. That court stated
that the provinces enjoy a “full power of regulation”, adding on p. 538, that
“[s]o long as the legislation regulates education and does not threaten the
existence of the separate schools or interfere with their denominational
character it is valid”. [Emphasis in original.]
Similarly, the
provincial power of regulation was recognized by Wilson J. in Reference Re
Bill 30, supra, at p. 1195, and G.M.P.S.B., supra, at
pp. 385-86. The fact that the power of regulation may have gone unexercised is
irrelevant. It is the fact that it existed which is critical, and which results in the province having a broad power of
regulation today. As Wilson J. stated in her concurring reasons in G.M.P.S.B.,
at p. 386:
The trustees’ power was not absolute and, even although no regulations
had in fact been passed in Ontario in relation to the curriculum by the
time of Union, the overriding regulatory authority of the province was there by
law. [Emphasis in original.]
The aspects
approach to the guarantees of s. 93(1) therefore allows Ontario to manage its
denominational education system as it sees fit, so long as it does not
prejudicially affect a denominational right or privilege or a non-denominational
right necessary to deliver the denominational elements of education.
39
The issue that arises therefore is whether the EQIA interferes with a
right or privilege attached to denominational schools, either a denominational
aspect directly or an aspect of education necessary to deliver the protected
denominational elements. Dealing first with the claimed right to financial
management and control, I agree with the courts below that the EQIA does
not interfere with those aspects of financial management and control that are
necessary to provide the denominational elements of education in the province.
Like the Circular of Instructions at issue in Ottawa Separate Schools
Trustees v. Mackell, supra, the EQIA “applies to public
schools and separate schools alike and impartially . . . there is nothing
whatever to indicate that it is intended to have any application . . . to
anything but secular teaching” (p. 73). The right to manage was specifically
claimed by the Ottawa separate school trustees in Ottawa Separate Schools
Trustees v. Mackell and was rejected, in relation to non-denominational
aspects, by the Privy Council. Lord Buckmaster L.C. concluded that “the right
to manage must be subject to the regulations under which all the schools must
be carried on” (p. 74).
40
The EQIA does not interfere with denominational aspects of
education, either directly or indirectly. Roman Catholic school boards remain
free to hire Roman Catholic teachers and chaplains, construct chapels, and
tailor curricula to reflect Catholic values. The EQIA affects only secular aspects of education, such as
class-size, teacher preparation time, teacher and trustee salaries, adult
education, and computers in the classroom.
41
The respondent relied on a number of expert opinions to this effect,
including those of John Sabo, Associate-Director of Corporate Services and
Treasurer of the York Catholic District School Board, Patrick Daly, past
president of the OCSTA, and Nancy Naylor, representative of the Ontario
Ministry of Education and Training. Upon cross-examination, one of the OECTA
appellants’ expert witnesses, Claire Ross, General Secretary of the OECTA, did
not refute this conclusion:
Q. So they are able to hire teachers?
A. They can hire in terms of the allocation. Yes.
Q. And they can go through the promotion process that they have in the
past of picking the most appropriate teacher to promote?
A. Yes.
Q. Okay. And that they are still able as a matter of authority under
Bill 160 to develop curriculum documents and adapt them for new Catholic
schools?
A. Yes.
Q. And they still have the authority, in terms of the Education Act
itself and in terms of the funding model, to employ chaplains if they so wish
to spend their money in that way?
A. Provided provision can be found within the rigidity of the funding
model, the answer is yes.
42
The intervener OCSTA, representing the English language Catholic school
boards in Ontario, agrees that the EQIA does not prejudicially affect
denominational aspects of education. In the OCSTA’s written submissions to
this Court, it states:
There would be a denominational challenge from OCSTA
if, for example, there were provisions in the funding model that prevented
separate boards from making expenditure decisions that are required to ensure
their denominational character, such as employment decisions, adapting secular
curricula, creating denominational courses of study, providing religious
instruction, or siting schools in locations accessible to the right holders.
These are all traditionally understood to be at the core of Catholic
denominational rights, but do not form an exhaustive list.
...
There is nothing in Bill 160 that interferes with
the right of Catholic boards to manage and control their schools, as the Scott
Act requires with its repeated references to management.
43
Like the courts below, I agree with this conclusion. The EQIA
affects only secular aspects of
education, and does not prejudicially affect denominational aspects of
education or any non-denominational aspects required to deliver the protected
denominational elements. In this respect, it is constitutional. As Meredith
C.J.C.P. stated in Ottawa Separate School Trustees v. City of Ottawa, supra,
at p. 630, “[e]ducational methods and machinery may and must change, but
separation, and equal rights regarding public schools, must remain as long as
provincial public schools last”. The EQIA brings change to the
financial management and control of separate schools in Ontario, but it treats
all school boards equally and preserves the denominational aspects of separate
schools.
44
I also find constitutional the Division D provisions that, under certain
conditions, empower the Minister of Education and Training to take over the
financial control of a school board. Similar legislation was successfully
challenged in Ottawa Separate Schools Trustees v. Ottawa Corporation, supra.
However, the legislation held to be ultra vires in that case allowed the
Lieutenant Governor in Council to take over all of the powers of a
school board for an indefinite period of time. Lord Buckmaster L.C. struck
down the legislation because of the sweeping, open-ended nature of the
interference with rights protected by s. 93(1) (at p. 81):
The case before their Lordships is not that of a mere interference with
a right or privilege, but of a provision which enables it to be withdrawn in
toto for an indefinite time. Their Lordships have no doubt that the power so
given would be exercised with wisdom and moderation, but it is the creation of
the power and not its exercise that is subject to objection, and the objection
would not be removed even though the powers conferred were never exercised at
all.
45
The Ontario government responded by passing new legislation, which was
held to be constitutional by the Ontario Supreme Court, Appellate Division in Re
Ottawa Separate Schools, supra. Meredith C.J.O. distinguished the
new legislation from the failed legislation on the following grounds: (1)
control over a board could be vested in a provincial body only under certain
circumstances and had to be revested by the Minister of Education once it
appeared that the schools would be conducted by the Board according to law; and
(2) any dispute over whether the criteria for vesting or revesting had been met
was to be resolved on summary application to the courts. He held that those
safeguards were sufficient to meet the requirements of s. 93(1) .
46
In my opinion, the EQIA provides greater protection to
denominational rights than the legislation upheld in Re Ottawa Separate
Schools, supra. Section 257.52(1) of the new Education Act specifically
forbids the Minister from interfering with the denominational aspects of a
Roman Catholic school board. Whether such an interference has occurred can be
reviewed by the courts, pursuant to s. 257.40(5). As will be examined below, a
province is free to deal with public school boards as it sees fit. The
constitutional concern with financial supervision only relates to separate
school boards, and then only in relation to the denominational aspects of those
boards. The protection provided by s. 257.52(1) is sufficient on its own to
meet the requirements of s. 93(1) of the Constitution Act, 1867 . Unlike
Ottawa Separate School Trustees v. City of Ottawa, supra, the EQIA
does not interfere with all the powers of a denominational school
board, but only with the non-denominational powers of a school board. If the
Minister interferes in any way with the denominational aspects of a separate
school, even if the interference results from the exercise of a
non-denominational power, an interested party can ask the courts to remedy the
interference. The protections provided by ss. 257.52(1) and 257.40(5)
therefore result in Division D of the new Education Act meeting the
requirements of s. 93(1) .
47
I also note that provincial supervision of a school board cannot be for
an indefinite period of time. The Minister’s control over a board must be
revoked when the board no longer has a deficit, or when the Lieutenant Governor
in Council is of the opinion that control should be restored to the board (s.
257.50). Although this provision is not strictly necessary to ensure the
constitutionality of the Division D powers, given the wide protection granted
by s. 257.52(1), it is another safeguard that is in place. For all of these
reasons, I conclude that the OECTA appellants’ claims with regard to
prejudicial interference with a right to financial management and control must
fail.
C. The
Claimed Right to Tax
48
It is beyond question that Roman Catholic school boards in
Ontario had the legal right to tax their supporters in 1867. Section 7 of the Scott
Act explicitly conferred this right. It states, in part, that separate
school trustees “shall have the power to impose, levy and collect School rates
or subscriptions, upon and from persons sending children to, or subscribing
towards the support of such Schools”. The political reality
at the time was that education could only be paid for out of funds raised
locally, and so all school boards in the province were given the power to tax
their supporters. As the Court of Appeal noted, at p. 16, “[c]omplete
provincial responsibility for the financing of education was simply outside the
experience of the founders of Confederation”. Local funds were supplemented by
provincial grants, but moneys raised through local taxation remained the
dominant component of education funding in the province up until the enactment
of the EQIA in 1997.
49
However, the fact that the right to tax
existed in 1867 does not mean that it is automatically protected by s. 93(1) .
Section 93(1) only protects rights or privileges “with respect to Denominational Schools”. This threshold requirement to access the
protections of s. 93(1) is the genesis of the aspects approach, which has long
been applied by the courts. The aspects approach to s. 93(1) requires
that the right in question be related to a denominational aspect of education,
or to a non-denominational aspect necessary to deliver the protected
denominational elements. I agree with the Court of Appeal that the authority
to tax supporters is not a right or privilege “with respect to Denominational
Schools”. Section 93(1) protects the right to funding for denominational
education, not the specific mechanism through which that funding is delivered.
As Gonthier J. stated in the Quebec Education Reference, supra,
at p. 590:
. . . fundamentally what matters is having the financial and physical
resources to operate school boards. The taxing power is only one possible means
of attaining this end. If it can be done otherwise, such as by an equal, or at
least appropriate and equitable, allocation of financing sources, it is hard to
speak of a prejudicial effect.
50
The Scott Act includes two funding mechanisms for
denominational schools in Ontario:
local taxation (s. 7) and provincial grants (s. 20). The province is generally free to alter the funding
allocation between these sources as it sees fit, provided that the source
relied on provides sufficient funds to operate a denominational education
system which is equivalent to the public education system in place at the
time. The animating principle is equality of educational opportunity. I need not decide the constitutionality of removing
the local tax base altogether, as the EQIA does not attempt to do so.
While it removes the ability of school boards to set the rate that is to be
applied to raise funds through local taxation, it does not remove the funding
mechanism of property taxation.
51
Provincial education grants have long been used to supplement funds
raised through local taxation in an attempt to achieve equality in Ontario’s
education system. I agree with the Ontario Court of Appeal’s observations, at
p. 21, that such grants were necessary because of the practical limitations
separate school boards faced in raising funds through local taxation:
[The separate school system’s] poorer assessment base and the risk of
taxpayer migration away from the system have always placed very significant
practical constraints on the power of separate school boards to tax their
supporters. The right to tax has never provided separate school boards with
more than limited financial autonomy.
52
Section 20 of the Scott Act requires that provincial education
grants be distributed on a fair and equitable basis between the public and
separate school systems. This Court canvassed the protections provided by s.
20 of the Scott Act, as constitutionally entrenched through s. 93(1) of
the Constitution Act, 1867 , in Reference Re Bill 30, supra,
and in Ontario Home Builders’, supra. In the Reference Re
Bill 30, Wilson J. stated, at pp. 1195-96:
It is clear that if the foregoing right [to provide
denominational education at a secondary level of instruction] was to be
meaningful an adequate level of funding was required to support it. This Court
held unanimously in Attorney General of Quebec v. Greater Hull School Board,
[1984] 2 S.C.R. 575, that the right of dissentient schools in Quebec to a
proportionate share of government funding was a right protected by s. 93 of the
Constitution Act, 1867 . Likewise, in my view, the right of separate
schools in Ontario. They were entitled to the proportionate funding provided
for in s. 20 of the Scott Act. This conclusion, it seems to me, is fully
consistent with the clear purpose of s. 93 , namely that the denominational
minority’s interest in a separate but suitable education for its children be
protected into the future.
In Ontario
Home Builders’, at para. 73, our Court affirmed this view:
... when one reviews the history and purpose of s. 93(1) , the principle
of proportionality can be seen for what it really is, namely, the means to a
constitutional end which is equality of educational opportunity. Moreover, as
I have noted above, the entire system of provincial grants in Ontario has not
been based on actual proportionality since early in the century. The departure
from strict, formalistic proportionality was made because it had led to a
serious inequality of educational opportunity. While the notion of
proportionality contained in s. 20 of the Scott Act is a constitutional
right embodied in s. 93(1) , the substantive purpose of this notion must be
borne in mind: the achievement of an educational system that distributes
provincial funds in a fair and non‑discriminatory manner to common and
separate schools alike. This is the substantive guarantee offered by s. 93(1) .
As the Court per Gonthier J. stated in Reference re Education Act
(Que.), [1993] 2 S.C.R. 511, at p. 567:
When we speak of equality, this must be understood
in the sense of equivalence and not that of strict quantitative identity, as
Chouinard J. noted in Greater Hull, supra, at p. 591:
Proportionality is more significant. Whether on the basis of total
population or that of school attendance, the principle of a fair and non‑discriminatory
distribution is recognized. [Emphasis added by Gonthier J.]
53
The EQIA enacts a mixed system of funding in Ontario. Local
taxation remains, but the Minister of Finance now sets the applicable tax rates
throughout the province. Provincial education grants are used to equalize
education funding between school boards. There is no evidence that this new
funding model has a prejudicial affect on the right of Roman Catholics in
Ontario to fair and equitable funding of their school system. As Lord
Buckmaster L.C. pointed out in Ottawa Separate Schools Trustees v. Ottawa
Corporation, supra, at p. 81, “an interference with a legal right or
privilege may not in all cases imply that such right or privilege has been
prejudicially affected”. The evidence is that the new funding model will
enrich the separate school system in Ontario as it is intended to have a
redistributive effect. Obviously, it is not the role of this Court to comment
on this policy decision. The role of this Court is to determine if the
legislation implementing the new education policy in Ontario prejudicially affects
any protected denominational rights.
54
As Meredith C.J.C.P. stated in Ottawa Separate School Trustees v.
City of Ottawa, supra, at p. 630:
The right and privilege which the Separate Schools
Act conferred when the Imperial enactment became law, and which the Separate
Schools Acts have ever since conferred, and still confers, was and is a right
to separation, to separate public schools of the like character, and maintained
in the like manner, as the general public schools.
The new
funding model enacted by the EQIA treats separate schools in a “like
manner” as public schools. In fact, all schools in the province are now
treated equally under uniform legislation. Section 234(2) of the Education
Act specifically imports the standard for fair and equitable funding of
separate schools set out by this Court in Reference Re Bill 30, supra,
and Ontario Home Builders’, supra. Section 257.107 requires a
committee to be established in 2003 to investigate whether the criteria set out
in s. 234(2) have indeed been met. Furthermore, interested parties are free to
seek a remedy in the courts if there is evidence that the guarantees provided
in s. 234(2) are not being met. At the same time, as was explored in relation
to the claimed right to financial management and control, the EQIA
preserves the “separateness” of separate schools.
55
Section 234(3) of the new Education Act also guarantees that
minority education rights protected by s. 23 of the Charter will be
respected by education funding in Ontario. In Mahe, supra,
Dickson C.J. explored the content of the protections offered by s. 23 . Writing
for the Court, at pp. 375-76, he employed an aspects approach similar to that
employed in relation to the guarantees of s. 93(1) :
Perhaps the most important point to stress is that
completely separate school boards are not necessarily the best means of
fulfilling the purpose of s. 23 . What is essential, however, to satisfy that
purpose is that the minority language group have control over those aspects of
education which pertain to or have an effect upon their language and culture.
This degree of control can be achieved to a substantial extent by guaranteeing
representation of the minority on a shared school board and by giving these
representatives exclusive control over all of the aspects of minority education
which pertain to linguistic and cultural concerns.
To give but one example, the right to tax (which
would accompany the creation of an independent school district), is not, in my
view, essential to satisfy the concerns of s. 23 with linguistic and cultural
security. Section 23 guarantees that minority schools shall receive public
funds, but it is not necessary that the funds be derived through a separate tax
base provided adequate funding is otherwise assured. Similar observations can
be made in respect of other features of separate school districts.
...
Where there are alternative ways of satisfying the
requirements, the public authorities may choose the means of fulfilling their
duties.
Section 93(1)
of the Constitution Act, 1867 offers guarantees
of the same nature as the guarantees provided
by s. 23 of the Charter , but for denominational aspects of
education instead of linguistic and cultural aspects. So long as separate
schools are funded in a manner that is fair and equitable as compared to their
public school counterparts, the underlying legislation
will not violate s. 93(1) .
56
There is no evidence before this
Court that the EQIA does not fund
separate schools in a fair and equitable manner. It specifically mandates fair and equitable treatment with regard to
the distribution of provincial education grants, which are used to equalize
funding after funds raised through property taxation are taken into account.
The evidence is that separate schools have actually seen their funding increase
under the new funding model. As the intervener OCSTA states in their factum,
the new funding model produces “the cherished result of equitable per pupil
funding”. The EQIA therefore does not prejudicially affect the right of
separate schools to fair and equitable funding as guaranteed by s. 93(1) of the
Constitution Act, 1867 through the operation of ss. 7 and 20 of the Scott
Act.
D. The
Rights of Public School Boards
57
Having found that separate
school boards in Ontario have neither a right to independent taxation nor an
absolute right to independent management and control, one can conclude that public school boards in the province also
do not have such rights. Subject to s. 93 , public school boards as an
institution have no constitutional status.
58
Campbell J. correctly stated the law in this regard in Ontario Public
School Boards’ Assn., supra, at p. 361:
Municipal governments and special purpose municipal
institutions such as school boards are creatures of the provincial government.
Subject to the constitutional limits in s. 93 of the Constitution Act, 1867
these institutions have no constitutional status or independent autonomy and
the province has absolute and unfettered legal power to do with them as it
wills.
See also Alberta
Public Schools, supra, at paras. 33 and 34.
59
The constitutional limits in s. 93 of the Constitution Act, 1867
protect the public school system to only a very limited extent. As was stated by a majority of this Court in Adler,
supra, at para. 41:
. . . the public school system is an integral part of the s. 93 scheme.
When the province funds public schools, it is, in the words of Wilson J. in Reference
Re Bill 30, at p. 1198, legislating “pursuant to the plenary power in
relation to education granted to the provincial legislatures as part of the
Confederation compromise”. A closer examination of s. 93 , in particular s.
93(1) , as it applies to the province of Ontario, will help to illustrate that
the public school system is impliedly, but nonetheless clearly, contemplated by
the terms of that section.
60
The Scott Act uses the publicly funded, non-denominational
education system as a benchmark for the education rights of Roman Catholics in
the province. As the majority also
pointed out in Adler, supra, at para. 43, the preamble of the Scott
Act is clear on this issue:
WHEREAS it is just and proper to restore to Roman Catholics in Upper
Canada certain rights which they formerly enjoyed in respect to separate
Schools, and to bring the provisions of the Law respecting Separate Schools
more in harmony with the provisions of the Law respecting Common Schools .
. . . [Emphasis added.]
Similarly,
both ss. 7 and 20 of the Scott Act define the rights and privileges of
separate schools in terms of the rights and privileges of the province’s public
schools. Section 120 of the Common Schools Act does the same. As a
result, Wilson J. concluded in the Reference Re Bill 30, supra,
at p. 1193, that:
The security afforded the Roman Catholic minority through the tying of
funding for its schools to a proportion of the funding for the common schools
was in the certainty that the Legislature would never cut off funding for the
common schools.
This
conclusion was again endorsed by this Court in Adler, supra, at
para. 45. Section 93(1) guarantees separate schools in Ontario the right to fair
and equitable treatment vis-à-vis their public school counterparts, as
well as to control over the denominational aspects of their education programs
and those non-denominational aspects necessary to effectuate the denominational
elements.
61
But s. 93 provides no constitutional protection for the design of
the public school system. The Constitution gives the provincial government the
plenary power over education in the province, and it is free to exercise this
power however it sees fit in relation to the public school system. As the
majority stated in Adler, supra,
at para. 48:
One thing should, however, be made clear. The
province remains free to exercise its plenary power with regard to education in
whatever way it sees fit, subject to the restrictions relating to separate
schools imposed by s. 93(1) .
62
A similar claim to a “sphere of reasonable autonomy” for public school
boards was made by a number of Alberta public school boards in Alberta
Public Schools, supra. This Court unanimously rejected their
claim. Major J. concluded, at para. 35, that “educational institutions are
malleable and subject to legislative reform”. He relied on the following
passage from Gonthier J. in the Quebec Education Reference, supra,
at pp. 541-42:
What s. 93 of the Constitution guarantees . . . is
the right to dissent itself, not the form of the institutions which have made
it possible to exercise that right since 1867. This means, for example, that
while the right of dissent obviously includes the means and framework in which
it is exercised, the latter are not in themselves constitutionally guaranteed.
The framers of the Constitution were wise enough not to determine finally the
form of institutions, as it is those very institutions which must be capable of
change in order to adapt to the varying social and economic conditions of
society. Moreover, as we shall see, the institutions have been altered by the
legislature many times since 1867.
While Gonthier J. was concerned with dissentient
schools, I agree with Major J.’s
statement in Alberta Public Schools that the conclusion is equally
applicable to public schools. Major J. held, at para. 37, that the
acceptance of a right of reasonable autonomy for public school boards is
inconsistent with, and would impair, the plenary power given to the provinces
over education by the opening words of s. 93. I adopt his reasoning in the
present appeal.
63
I also reject the argument that a constitutional convention has arisen
regarding the design of the public education system in Ontario. The OPSBA
appellants correctly concede that such a convention could not be used to
invalidate express legislation. In Reference Re Resolution to Amend the
Constitution, [1981] 1 S.C.R. 753 ( “Patriation Reference”), the
majority of this Court stated, at p. 880:
The conventional rules of the constitution present
one striking peculiarity. In contradistinction to the laws of the
constitution, they are not enforced by the courts. One reason for this
situation is that, unlike common law rules, conventions are not judge‑made
rules. They are not based on judicial precedents but on precedents established
by the institutions of government themselves. Nor are they in the nature of
statutory commands which it is the function and duty of the courts to obey and
enforce. Furthermore, to enforce them would mean to administer some formal
sanction when they are breached. But the legal system from which they are
distinct does not contemplate formal sanctions for their breach.
Instead, the
remedy for breach of a constitutional convention must be found outside the
courts, if a remedy is to be found at all (Patriation Reference, at pp.
881-83):
The remedy lies with some other institutions of government; furthermore
it is not a formal remedy and it may be administered with less certainty or
regularity than it would be by a court.
...
This conflict between convention and law which
prevents the courts from enforcing conventions also prevents conventions from
crystallizing into laws, unless it be by statutory adoption.
It is because the sanctions of convention rest with
institutions of government other than courts, such as the Governor General or
the Lieutenant Governor, or the Houses of Parliament, or with public opinion
and ultimately, with the electorate, that it is generally said that they are
political.
64
The law in this respect was recently affirmed by this Court in Reference
Re Secession of Quebec, [1998] 2 S.C.R. 217, at para. 98:
The respective roles of the courts and political
actors in discharging the constitutional obligations we have identified follows
ineluctably from the foregoing observations. In the Patriation Reference,
a distinction was drawn between the law of the Constitution, which, generally
speaking, will be enforced by the courts, and other constitutional rules, such
as the conventions of the Constitution, which carry only political sanctions.
65
The OPSBA appellants nevertheless seek a declaration that a
constitutional convention exists regarding the right of school boards in
Ontario to levy and determine property taxes for education purposes, presumably
so that they could then seek a remedy for a violation of this convention in the
appropriate forum. I cannot agree that such a convention exists.
Constitutional conventions relate to the principles of responsible government,
not to how a particular power, which is clearly within a provincial government’s
jurisdiction, is to be exercised. The nature of constitutional conventions was
reviewed by this Court in Patriation Reference, supra, at pp. 878
and 880:
It was apparently Dicey who, in the first edition of his Law of the
Constitution, in 1885, called them the “conventions of the constitution”,
(see W. S. Holdsworth, “The Conventions of the Eighteenth Century Constitution”
(1932), 17 Iowa Law Rev. 161), an expression which quickly became current.
What Dicey described under these terms are the principles and rules of
responsible government, several of which are stated above and which regulate
the relations between the Crown, the prime minister, the cabinet and the two
Houses of Parliament. These rules developed in Great Britain by way of custom and
precedent during the nineteenth century and were exported to such British
colonies as were granted self‑government.
...
The main purpose of constitutional conventions is to
ensure that the legal framework of the constitution will be operated in
accordance with the prevailing constitutional values or principles of the
period. For example, the constitutional value which is the pivot of the
conventions stated above and relating to responsible government is the
democratic principle: the powers of the state must be exercised in accordance
with the wishes of the electorate; and the constitutional value or principle
which anchors the conventions regulating the relationship between the members
of the Commonwealth is the independence of the former British colonies.
Similarly, in
the Reference Re Objection by Quebec to a Resolution to Amend the
Constitution, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 793, at p. 803, this Court stated that the “main
purpose of constitutional conventions is to ensure that the legal framework of
the constitution will be operated in accordance with generally accepted
principles”. There is no generally accepted principle in Canada as to the
design of the public education system. Quite the opposite is true, for every
province has designed its public school system in a different way.
Furthermore, the fact that one province has used a particular design for an
extended period of time reflects consistency in public policy. It does not
announce the arrival of a new principle of responsible government.
66
Even if this were the type of issue over which a constitutional
convention could develop, which I believe it is not, there is no evidence of
such a convention developing in Ontario. This Court recently rejected a
similar constitutional convention argument with regard to the design of the
Alberta public education system in Alberta Public Schools, supra,
at paras. 38-41. Major J. noted that the education system in Alberta has
always had “a significant degree of centralized control” (para. 40). As
illustrated in the review of the powers of the Chief Superintendent of
Education for Upper Canada and the Council of Public Instruction for Upper
Canada above, Ontario has similarly always had a significant degree of
centralized control over its education system. I adopt Major J.’s conclusion
in Alberta Public Schools, at para. 41, that the recognition of a
constitutional convention in this area would be inconsistent with the plenary
power over education given to the provinces in s. 93 . For all of these
reasons, the constitutional convention argument fails.
E. Delegation
of Taxation
67
The OPSBA appellants argue that the power granted to the Minister of
Finance under s. 257.12(1)(b) of the new Education Act to determine
property tax rates for education purposes is unconstitutional. Specifically,
they submit that this provision violates the preamble, ss. 53 and 54 of the Constitution
Act, 1867 , the relevant portions of which read:
Whereas the Provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia, and
New Brunswick have expressed their Desire to be federally united into One
Dominion under the Crown of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland,
with a Constitution similar in Principle to that of the United Kingdom . . . .
53. Bills for appropriating any Part of the
Public Revenue, or for imposing any Tax or Impost, shall originate in the House
of Commons.
54. It shall not be lawful for the House of
Commons to adopt or pass any Vote, Resolution, Address, or Bill for the
Appropriation of any Part of the Public Revenue, or of any Tax or Impost, to
any Purpose that has not been first recommended to that House by Message of the
Governor General in the Session in which such Vote, Resolution, Address, or
Bill is proposed.
Sections 53
and 54 apply to provincial legislatures by virtue of s. 90 of the Constitution
Act, 1867 :
90. The following Provisions of this Act
respecting the Parliament of Canada, namely, ‑‑ the Provisions
relating to Appropriation and Tax Bills, the Recommendation of Money Votes, the
Assent to Bills, the Disallowance of Acts, and the Signification of Pleasure on
Bills reserved, ‑‑ shall extend and apply to the Legislatures of
the several Provinces as if those Provisions were here re‑enacted and
made applicable in Terms to the respective Provinces and the Legislatures
thereof, with the Substitution of the Lieutenant Governor of the Province for
the Governor General, of the Governor General for the Queen and for a Secretary
of State, of One Year for Two Years, and of the Province for Canada.
68
Sections 53 and 54 can be amended by Parliament or by provincial
legislatures. As Pigeon J. stated for the majority in Reference Re
Agricultural Products Marketing Act, [1978] 2 S.C.R. 1198, at p. 1291, “ss.
53 and 54 are not entrenched provisions of the constitution, they are clearly
within those parts which the Parliament of Canada is empowered to amend by s.
91(1)”. Although the amending provisions of the Constitution were altered when
the Constitution was patriated in 1982, ss. 53 and 54 continue to be
unentrenched provisions of the Constitution. By virtue of s. 45 of the Constitution
Act, 1982 , the legislature of each province retains the exclusive
discretion to make laws amending the constitution of the province: see Eurig,
supra, at para. 35. The intervener Attorney General of British Columbia
points out that British Columbia has removed s. 53 from its constitution: Constitution
Act, R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 62.
69
Nevertheless, ss. 53 and 54 continue to apply to the Ontario
legislature. Furthermore, the OPSBA appellants submit that the preamble of the
Constitution, by stating that the Canadian Constitution will be “similar in
Principle to that of the United Kingdom”, has imported the
Principle of “no taxation without representation” to Canadian law. This
principle was established in the United Kingdom by the 1688 Bill of Rights:
That levying Money for or to the
Use of the Crowne by pretence of Prerogative without Grant of Parlyament for
longer time or in other manner than the same is or shall be granted is Illegal.
70
I accept that there is a constitutional guarantee of “no taxation
without representation” in Canada. However, I conclude that the requirements
of this guarantee have been met by the EQIA. Before I explain my
reasoning, I wish to point out that s. 54 of the Constitution Act, 1867
is not relevant to this issue. Joan Small correctly states the function of s.
54 in “Money Bills and the Use of the Royal Recommendation in Canada: Practice
versus Principle?” (1995), 27 Ottawa L. Rev. 33, at pp. 35 and 40:
Section 54 requires a royal recommendation for any “Bill for the
Appropriation of any Part of the Public Revenue, or of any Tax or Impost”.
...
Section 54 is directed to the House of Commons alone. It states that,
in effect, an appropriation must first be recommended to the House of Commons
by the message of the Governor General in the session in which the bill is
introduced. The appropriation is of one of two things: any part of the public
revenue, or any tax or impost. The section has nothing to do with the actual
imposition or levying of any tax or impost.
This view was
endorsed by Major J. for the majority in Eurig, supra, at para.
37, where he concluded that “s. 54 concerns the appropriation of taxes, and not
the imposition of taxes”. The case at bar, like Eurig, is concerned
with whether the imposition of a tax is constitutional. It has not been argued
that the government of Ontario failed to meet the requirements of s. 54 when it
appropriated public funds for education grants.
71
In my opinion, the fundamental democratic principle of “no taxation
without representation” is guaranteed by s. 53
of the Constitution Act, 1867 . As Major J. stated for the
majority in Eurig, supra, at para. 30:
[Section 53 ] codifies the principle of no taxation without
representation, by requiring any bill that imposes a tax to originate with the
legislature. My interpretation of s. 53 does not prohibit Parliament or the
legislatures from vesting any control over the details and mechanism of
taxation in statutory delegates such as the Lieutenant Governor in Council.
Rather, it prohibits not only the Senate, but also any other body other than
the directly elected legislature, from imposing a tax on its own accord.
This view was
affirmed in Westbank First Nation v. British Columbia Hydro and Power
Authority, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 134. Writing for the Court, Gonthier J. stated,
at para. 19:
...the Canadian Constitution (through the operation of s. 53 of the Constitution
Act, 1867 ) demands that there should be no taxation without
representation. In other words, individuals being taxed in a democracy have
the right to have their elected representatives debate whether their money
should be appropriated, and determine how it should be spent.
72
I need not comment on whether
the preamble of the Constitution Act, 1867 also protects this principle,
as s. 53 continues to apply to Ontario. Whether the preamble may be relied on
to import the principle of no taxation without representation into
jurisdictions that have repealed s. 53 is best decided in a case directly
raising that question.
73
The issue is therefore whether the principle of no taxation without
representation is respected by the EQIA. In Eurig, supra,
the requirements necessary to satisfy this principle were left open. Major J.
stated, at para. 36:
The Ontario legislature did not delegate to the Lieutenant Governor in
Council the authority to impose a tax. Therefore whether it could
constitutionally do so does not need to be addressed.
See also para.
39. With the EQIA, the Ontario legislature has delegated the authority
to impose a tax. I agree with the Ontario Court of Appeal that a tax is not
imposed until the rate is set. Along with the tax base and time unit, the tax
rate is a defining feature of a tax. This must be the case, for if the rate is
zero, there is no tax. As the Court of Appeal stated, at p. 41:
... an element, or component, of the exercise of the power to tax is
the establishment of the amount, or rate, of the tax, not only to enable the
taxpayer to know the extent of his or her obligation, but to enable the taxing
authority to determine the anticipated amount of tax revenue it will obtain.
See Executors
of Will of Hon. Patrick Burns, deceased v. Minister of National Revenue,
[1947] S.C.R. 132, at p. 155, per Estey J. (dissenting in part); rev’d
in part [1950] A.C. 213, at p. 226, where the Privy Council agreed with Estey
J.’s dissenting view that “without a rate or determinable amount there can be
no impost”.
74
The delegation of the imposition of a tax is constitutional if express
and unambiguous language is used in making the delegation. The animating
principle is that only the legislature can impose a new tax ab initio.
But if the legislature expressly and clearly authorizes the imposition of a tax
by a delegated body or individual, then the requirements of the principle of
“no taxation without representation” will be met. In such a situation, the
delegated authority is not being used to impose a completely new tax, but only
to impose a tax that has been approved by the legislature. The democratic
principle is thereby preserved in two ways. First, the legislation expressly
delegating the imposition of a tax must be approved by the legislature.
Second, the government enacting the delegating legislation remains ultimately
accountable to the electorate at the next general election.
75
This view accords with the majority position in Eurig, supra.
Major J. stated, at paras. 31-32:
In our system of responsible government, the
Lieutenant Governor in Council cannot impose a new tax ab initio without
the authorization of the legislature. As Audette J. succinctly stated in The
King v. National Fish Co., [1931] Ex. C.R. 75, at p. 83, “[t]he Governor in
Council has no power, proprio vigore, to impose taxes unless under
authority specifically delegated to it by Statute. The power of taxation is
exclusively in Parliament.”
The basic purpose of s. 53 is to constitutionalize the
principle that taxation powers cannot arise incidentally in delegated
legislation. In so doing, it ensures parliamentary control over, and
accountability for, taxation.
Major J. later
referred to this, at para. 40, as the “constitutional requirement for a clear
and unambiguous authorization of taxation within the enabling statute”. The EQIA
meets this requirement, as s. 257.12(1)(b) of the new Education Act
expressly authorizes the Minister of Finance to prescribe the tax rates for
school purposes. When the Minister sets the applicable rates, a tax is not
imposed ab initio, but is imposed pursuant to a specific legislative
grant of authority. Furthermore, the
delegation of the setting of the rate takes place within a detailed statutory framework,
setting out the structure of the tax, the tax base, and the principles for its
imposition.
76
As Bastarache J. pointed out in Eurig, supra, at para. 55:
The provincial legislature is entitled to delegate taxing powers to its
subordinate bodies, including the Lieutenant Governor in Council (Hodge v.
The Queen (1883), 9 App. Cas. 117 (P.C.), at pp. 131‑33; Shannon
v. Lower Mainland Dairy Products Board, [1938] A.C. 708 (P.C.), at p. 722; Irving
Oil Ltd. v. Provincial Secretary of New Brunswick, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 787).
This Court
divided in Eurig not over whether this was a correct statement of the
law (as the majority felt it was premature to comment on the issue), but over
whether s. 5 of Ontario’s Administration of Justice Act, R.S.O. 1990, c.
A.6, expressly authorized a delegation of taxation. Both the majority opinion
and the concurring opinion of Binnie J. concluded that it did not, while the
dissenting opinion of Bastarache J. concluded that it did. In this case,
however, the delegation of the taxing power by the EQIA is clear and
unambiguous.
77
There is long-standing legal authority for the view that the test for
constitutional delegation of the taxation power is the use of clear and
unambiguous language. In Attorney-General v. Wilts United Dairies, Ltd.
(1921), 37 L.T.R. 884 (C.A.), at p. 885, aff’d (1922), 91 L.J.K.B. 897 (H.L.),
Scrutton L.J. stated:
It is conceivable that Parliament, which may pass
legislation requiring the subject to pay money to the Crown, may also delegate
its powers of imposing such payments to the Executive, but in my view the
clearest words should be required before the Courts hold that such an
unusual delegation has taken place. As Chief Justice Wilde said in Gosling v.
Veley, 12 Q.B., at p. 407 : “The rule of law that no pecuniary burden can
be imposed upon the subjects of this country, by whatever name it may be
called, whether tax, due, rate or toll, except upon clear and distinct legal
authority, established by those who seek to impose the burthen, has been so
often the subject of legal decision that it may be deemed a legal axiom, and
requires no authority to be cited in support of it.” [Emphasis added.]
This case was
relied on in Gruen Watch Co. of Canada Ltd. v. Attorney-General of Canada,
[1950] O.R. 429 (H.C.), at p. 438, affirmed on this point in Bulova Watch
Co. v. Attorney-General of Canada, [1951] O.R. 360 (C.A.), where McRuer
C.J.H.C. stated:
It is for the legislative body to decide in every case what power is to
be delegated to any administrative body, and in each case the administrative
tribunal is confined to the express authority delegated to it and to the
authority that may arise by necessary implication. In no case is the exercise
of the delegated authority more carefully scrutinized than in the case where it
is claimed that it gives a right to impose any financial burden on the subject.
The same
principles apply to the delegation of powers to the executive. As previously
referred to in paras. 75 and 76, see The King v. National Fish Co.,
[1931] Ex. C.R. 75, at p. 83, and Hodge v. The Queen (1883), 9 App. Cas.
117 (P.C.), at pp. 131‑33.
78
These principles explain how Parliament and the provincial legislatures
are able to delegate taxing authority to municipalities, school boards and
Aboriginal band councils. Westbank First Nation, supra, provides
but one example of the constitutional delegation of such a taxing power, at
para. 36:
The impugned charges are imposed under the authority
of the legislature and levied by a public body. The by‑laws are imposed
pursuant to the power conferred by s. 83 of the Indian Act . The taxes
are levied by the Band Council, under its conferred authority, and are approved
by the Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development.
79
As this passage implies, a tax imposed through the delegation of the
taxing authority must also be intra vires, for a legislature cannot
delegate a power it does not have. In the case of provincial legislatures,
this primarily means that the delegated tax must be a direct tax, given that s.
92(2) of the Constitution Act, 1867 assigns to the provinces only the
power of “Direct Taxation within the Province in order to the raising of a
Revenue for Provincial Purposes”. Property taxes for education purposes are a
direct tax, and so are intra vires the province. The delegation of the
taxing authority in the EQIA is therefore constitutional. The
delegation has been effected using express
and unambiguous words, and the tax that the Minister has been delegated the
authority to impose is intra vires the province.
VI. Conclusion
80
Section 93(1) of the Constitution
Act, 1867 guarantees denominational school boards in Ontario the right to
fair and equitable funding, and to control over the denominational aspects of
their education program, as well as those non-denominational aspects necessary
to deliver the denominational elements. Although s. 93(1) uses the public
school system in Ontario as a comparator for separate school funding, it does
not guarantee any particular elements of the design of the public school
system. The EQIA respects the s. 93 guarantees. The new funding model established by the EQIA treats Roman Catholic schools in the
province fairly and equitably. Furthermore, the
EQIA does not interfere with the denominational aspects, or those
non-denominational aspects necessary to deliver the denominational aspects, of
the province’s denominational school system.
81
For the foregoing reasons, I
would dismiss the appeal and answer the constitutional questions as follows:
1. Do Part IX Division B, Part IX Division
F, and, in particular, ss. 257.7, 257.12, 257.19 and 257.106 of the Education
Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.2, as amended by the Education Quality
Improvement Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, c. 31, prejudicially affect rights held
under s. 93(1) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
The answer is no.
2. Do ss. 231, 232 and 234 of the Education
Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.2, as amended by the Education Quality
Improvement Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, c. 31, and the education Funding Formula
enacted pursuant to s. 234 of the Education Act and presently embodied
in O.Reg. 287/98 and O.Reg. 214/99, prejudicially affect rights held under s.
93(1) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
The answer is no.
3. Does Part IX, Division D of the Education
Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.2, as amended by the Education Quality
Improvement Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, c. 31, prejudicially affect rights held
under s. 93(1) of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
The answer is no.
4. If the answer to questions 1, 2 or 3 is
in the affirmative with respect to Roman Catholic separate school rights, are
those provisions, or any of them, also invalid with respect to public school
supporters and public school boards, by virtue of either s. 93 of the Constitution
Act, 1867 , or constitutional convention?
The answer is no.
5. Does s. 257.12(1)(b) of the Education
Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. E.2, as amended by the Education Quality
Improvement Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, c. 31, contravene the preamble, s. 53 , or
s. 54 of the Constitution Act, 1867 ?
The answer is no.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitors for the appellants the Ontario English
Catholic Teachers’ Association, Marshall Jarvis, Claire Ross and Annemarie
Ross: Cavalluzzo Hayes Shilton McIntyre & Cornish, Toronto.
Solicitors for the appellants the Ontario Public
School Boards’ Association, the Toronto District School Board, the Ontario
Secondary School Teachers’ Federation, the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of
Ontario, Joleene Kemp, David Edwards and Robert Churchill: Hicks
Morley Hamilton Stewart Storie, Toronto.
Solicitor for the respondent: The
Ministry of the Attorney General, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General
of Quebec: The Department of Justice, Sainte-Foy.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General
of Manitoba: The Department of Justice, Winnipeg.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General
of British Columbia: The Ministry of the Attorney General, Victoria.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General
for Alberta: The Department of Justice, Edmonton.
Solicitors for the intervener the Ontario Catholic
School Trustees’ Association: Miller Thomson, Toronto.
Solicitors for the interveners the Association
franco-ontarienne des conseils scolaires catholiques and the Association des
conseillers(ères) des écoles publiques de l’Ontario: Heenan Blaikie,
Toronto.
Solicitors for the interveners the Alberta Catholic
School Trustees’ Association, the Board of Lethbridge Roman Catholic Separate
School District No. 9 and Dwayne Berlando: Fraser Milner Casgrain,
Edmonton.
Solicitors for the interveners the Boards of
Education of Regina School Division No. 4, Saskatchewan Rivers School Division
No. 119, Swift Current School Division No. 94, Weyburn School Division No. 97,
Yorkton School Division No. 93, Moose Jaw School Division No. 1, Saskatoon
School Division No. 13, and Estevan School Division No.
95: MacPherson Leslie & Tyerman, Regina.
Solicitors for the interveners the Public School
Boards’ Association of Alberta, the Board of Trustees of the Edmonton School
District No. 7 and Cathryn Staring Parrish: Dale Gibson
Associates, Edmonton.